Religion - Abortion - Abortion in Israel
A 1977 law ensures a
low-cost, and in some cases free, legal abortion to any woman who fills
one of four criteria:
-
She is under 18 or
over 40 (cost to those in between: 1,500 shekels [$370]).
-
She is carrying a
fetus with a serious mental or physical defect (free).
-
She claims that the
fetus results from forbidden relations such as rape or incest (free)
or, in the case of a married woman, that the baby is not her
husband's (not free). Single women also fall under this clause, and
they too must pay.
-
She shows that by
continuing the pregnancy, her physical or mental health would be
damaged (free).
In 1980, a fifth
criterion that allowed abortions for women living in economic hardship
was abolished due to pressure from religious political parties.
A woman who seeks to
terminate a pregnancy must appear before one of the 41 abortion
committees operating in public and private hospitals around the country.
These committees include a physician whose field of expertise is
obstetrics and gynecology; another physician who is either a family
doctor, psychiatrist, internist or gynecologist and a social worker. At
least one woman must be present on each committee.
Six separate committees
consider requests for termination when a fetus is beyond 24 weeks old.
No hospitals in
Jerusalem, however, will perform these abortions.
In 1999, 19,674
applications out of 20,581 were approved (96%) and 18,785 pregnancies
were terminated. In addition, 16,000 abortions were illegally performed
in private doctors' clinics.
See also
Abortions in Israel
Source:
Jerusalem Report,
(February 12, 2001). |
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